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Global market integration increases likelihood that a future African Green Revolution could increase crop land use and CO2 emissions

By Thomas W. Hertel, Navin Ramankutty, Uris Lantz C Baldos1

1. Purdue University

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Abstract

There has been a resurgence of interest in the impacts of agricultural productivity on land use and the environment. At the center of this debate is the assertion that agricultural innovation is land sparing. However, numerous case studies and global empirical studies have found little evidence of higher yields being accompanied by reduced area. We find that these studies overlook two crucial factors: estimation of a true counterfactual scenario and a tendency to adopt a regional, rather than a global, perspective. This paper introduces a general framework for analyzing the impacts of regional and global innovation on long run crop output, prices, land rents, land use, and associated CO2 emissions. In so doing, it facilitates a rec- onciliation of the apparently conflicting views of the impacts of agricultural productivity growth on global land use and environ- mental quality. Our historical analysis demonstrates that the Green Revolution in Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East was unam- biguously land and emissions sparing, compared with a counterfac- tual world without these innovations. In contrast, we find that the environmental impacts of a prospective African Green Revolution are potentially ambiguous. We trace these divergent outcomes to relative differences between the innovating region and the rest of the world in yields, emissions efficiencies, cropland supply response, and intensification potential. Globalization of agriculture raises the potential for adverse environmental consequences. However, if sus- tained for several decades, an African Green Revolution will even- tually become land sparing.

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Researchers should cite this work as follows:

  • Thomas W. Hertel; Navin Ramankutty; Uris Lantz C Baldos (2016), "Global market integration increases likelihood that a future African Green Revolution could increase crop land use and CO2 emissions," https://mygeohub.org/resources/1205.

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